What the Supreme Court Really Said

 


Fidelity vs. Fiction: Bank Reacts to N225 Billion
Judgment Rumour

Last
weekend, headlines blared that Fidelity Bank was on the brink of bankruptcy,
facing a ₦225 billion Supreme Court judgment.

But
today, the bank fired back.

In a
detailed press statement dated May 19, 2025, Fidelity Bank clarified the facts,
figures, and fiction surrounding the matter and called out media houses for
“malicious misrepresentation.”

Here’s
what actually happened, and what it means for Nigeria’s banking sector.

The Backstory: A Legacy Dispute from 2002

The case
in question originates from a $3 million loan FSB International Bank (now part
of Fidelity Bank) gave to G. Cappa Plc in 2002. The loan was secured against a
property in Ikoyi, Lagos.

  • When G. Cappa defaulted, FSB
    sold the mortgaged lease interest to Sagecom Concepts Ltd
  • But G. Cappa challenged the
    sale in court and refused to vacate the property for years while still collecting
    rent

This
began a 15+ year legal saga between G. Cappa, Sagecom, and the successor bank Fidelity.

Supreme Court Ruling: Real, But Misrepresented

  • The Supreme Court upheld a
    Lagos High Court judgment awarding damages to Sagecom Concepts Ltd
  • The case involved rental
    losses from 2005 to 2018, not direct breach of contract by Fidelity Bank
    alone
  • Fidelity and G. Cappa are
    jointly liable but the bank strongly disputes the ₦225 billion figure

What Does Fidelity Actually Owe?

Fidelity
Bank says:

  • Based on 2005 exchange
    rates, their liability is closer to ₦14 billion
  • Even using the 2018 exchange
    rate (which the Supreme Court recently reaffirmed in another case), the
    entire award should not exceed ₦30.7 billion mostly payable by G. Cappa
    Plc

They’ve
asked the court to clarify and properly interpret the actual amount owed.

On Bankruptcy Rumors: Fidelity Responds Strongly

Fidelity
dismissed the bankruptcy claims as:

“Malicious,
false, and contempt of court.”

They
claim the People’s Gazette report violated an injunction issued on May 7, 2025,
which barred public commentary on the matter.

The bank
reaffirmed its financial strength:

  • One of Nigeria’s most capitalised
    institutions
  • Released strong Q1 2025
    results
  • Operations running locally
    and internationally without stress

Financial Juggernut Insight

Don’t
confuse a legacy lawsuit with insolvency.

Legal
setbacks happen even for big banks. But misreporting can cause public panic,
stock pressure, and reputational damage.

Fidelity
is playing legal defense not liquidation. And bank customers and investors
should read court filings, not just headlines.

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